In America - vulnerability of Muslims

while all else happens, this is one bit of expose’ that needs to be given a serious look. any thoughts on the article and the issue/s it raised?

dushwari

Islam in America: A Special Report
Muslim Americans are one of this country’s greatest strengths. But they’re vulnerable as never before.
By Lisa Miller
Newsweek
July 30, 2007 issue - Fareed Siddiq is a successful businessman and a father of two. He lives in Chagrin
Falls, Ohio—a 19th-century mill town built on a river and known for its scenic waterfalls and dams—in a
five-bedroom house he recently paid for, in cash, with his savings. Prominent in local civic and
religious organizations, including the Red Cross and the chamber of commerce, Siddiq was invited to the
InterContinental Hotel in downtown Cleveland earlier this month along with about 400 other business
leaders to hear President George W. Bush speak.
He was moved to ask his president a question: “What,” he asked, hauling his 6-foot-5, 245-pound frame to
the microphone, “are we doing with public diplomacy to change the hearts and minds of a billion and a
half Muslims around the world?” What should he tell his friends and relatives in Pakistan about why he
continues to live in the United States?
“Great question,” answered the president. “I’m confident your answer is, ‘I love living in America, the
land of the free and the home of the brave, the country where you can come and ask the president a
question and a country where—’ Are you a Muslim?”
“Yes,” answered Siddiq.
“Where you can worship your religion freely. It’s a great country where you can do that.”
It was a good answer, says Siddiq, but not enough for him—not when he, a financial adviser at a major
investment bank, is afraid to use the bathroom on flights because he doesn’t want to frighten his fellow
passengers as he walks down the aisle. He thinks anti-Muslim sentiment in the country is getting worse,
not better. “I’m not so much worried about myself,” he adds. “It’s the young people I’m concerned with.
Those are the people we need to try—not only as Muslims but as Americans—to make them feel part of
America. If you alienate the Muslim young people from America, that is dangerous.”
Nearly six years after 9/11, the story of Muslims in America is one of overwhelming success. The
National Intelligence Estimate released last week warned that Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda continue to
have their sights set on an attack within the United States. The report also notes a growing radicalism
among Muslims in the West. But at a press briefing, intelligence officials were particularly concerned
about the threat of homegrown terror cells within Europe’s Muslim communities. America, the officials
said, has so far provided relatively infertile ground for the growing and grooming of Muslim extremists.
“Most Muslims in America think of themselves as Americans,” says Charlie Allen, intelligence chief at
the Homeland Security Department.

In fact, Muslim Americans represent the most affluent, integrated, politically engaged Muslim community
in the Western world. According to a major survey done by the Pew Research Center and released last
spring, Muslims in America earn about the same as their neighbors, and their educational levels are
about the same. An overwhelming number—71 percent—agree that in America, you can “get ahead with hard
work.” In stark contrast, Muslims in France, Germany and England are about 20 percent more likely to
live in poverty.
The alleged terror plots uncovered since 9/11 are a sign that this success cannot be taken for granted.
Ire among Muslim Americans at U.S. policies in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories is at a
peak, and thanks to satellite news channels like Al-Jazeera and the Internet, that dissatisfaction can
spread like fire. As the Muslim community expands and becomes more established, tensions within the
community are also growing—between young and old, immigrant and native-born. Across the country, second-
and third-generation Muslims are visibly grappling with how to be Muslim and American at once, while
their parents look on with pride—and, like Siddiq, concern.
There are 2.35 million Muslims in America according to Pew, though many estimates put that number much
higher, and 65 percent of them are foreign-born. These Muslims began coming here in large waves after
1965, when U.S. law changed to allow increased immigration from countries beyond Western Europe. Over
the past four decades they have come from South Asia (Pakistan, India and most recently Bangladesh), the
Arab world (the Palestinian territories, Lebanon, Egypt, Iran), as well as Europe and Africa. They came
for education and advancement, but also to follow family, and—as in the case of the 35,000 Somalis who
began arriving in the 1990s—to flee war and oppression in their home countries. The pull of the American
dream remains strong. “The U.S. is founded on the idea that we’re all connected to a set of ideas, not a
set of histories,” says Keith Ellison, the Democrat from Minnesota who is Congress’s first Muslim. “For
all our criticisms, the idea of America is an amazing thing—a society organized around a set of
principles instead of around racial or cultural identity.”
Most of the Muslims who were born here are African-American converts and descendants of converts. But a
fast-growing number are the children of immigrants, and this last group is extremely young; nearly half
are between 18 and 29. In this melting pot, no one group is significantly bigger or more powerful than
any of the others—it is, Muslim Americans like to say, the most diverse group of Muslims anywhere except
in Mecca during the annual pilgrimage, or hajj.
This profound diversity and relative affluence sets the Muslim community here dramatically apart from
those in Europe, where Muslims came from their native countries as many as four generations ago largely
as factory workers or laborers. “The Moroccans, the Turks, they were recruited for their illiteracy, for
their strong hands and good teeth,” says the provocative Dutch singer Raja el-Mouhandiz, whose parents
were from North Africa. When the factory jobs went away, Europe’s Muslims continued to live in ethnic
ghettos, isolated from the larger society—a society that tended to be white, homogenous and, on some
basic level, impenetrable. In most European countries, Muslim employment is 15 to 40 percent below the
population at large.
Significantly, one of the more notable cases in America—the young men from upstate New York, dubbed the
Lackawanna Six, who were arrested in 2002 and pleaded guilty to having trained with Al Qaeda in
Afghanistan—grew up in an environment somewhat analogous to that of Europe. Yemenites migrated to
Lackawanna in the 1930s for jobs in the steel mills. Those jobs disappeared, but the Yemenite
population, now fully American, grew and stayed, and the young people there continue to struggle with
drugs, crime and unemployment. In the Yemenite neighborhoods of Lackawanna, about a third live below the
poverty line.

An equally critical but perhaps less obvious benefit to U.S. Muslims is the religiosity of the American
people. Even if a religious practice is regarded with suspicion in America, it is generally treated with
respect. In a NEWSWEEK Poll, 69 percent of Americans said they thought Muslim American students should
be allowed to wear headscarves in class. (The devout prime minister of Turkey, a Muslim country with a
tradition of militant secularism, actually sent his daughters to America for college so they could
continue wearing their scarves.) “When I say to an evangelical Christian, ‘It’s prayer time,’ they might
question the way I pray, but they understand viscerally the importance of prayer,” says Eboo Patel,
founder of the Interfaith Youth Core in Chicago. “When I lived in England”—which Patel did from 1998 to
2001—“and I said, ‘It’s prayer time,’ people looked at me as if I was an alien.”
It wouldn’t be too much of an exaggeration to say that on September 10, 2001, the Muslim American
universe was largely invisible. The only Muslims most people here knew by name were Malcolm X, Louis
Farrakhan and Muhammad Ali. If their doctor or accountant was Muslim, the average American probably
didn’t give it much thought.
The Muslim community itself was partially responsible for this isolation—like the Italian, Irish and
Jewish immigrants before them, many hunkered down in ethnic enclaves. They strove to fit in, but
quietly. For decades, the Islamic Center of New England, in Quincy, Mass., was home to a growing group
of Lebanese immigrants who came to America for work in the shipyards. It was a cozy place, where people
with similar backgrounds came to meet, pray and gossip. The imam, a Lebanese man named Talal Eid, was a
perfect fit—he understood the community’s values and he shared their interest in becoming American. “I
have a woman with a head cover and a Muslim woman without a head cover,” he says of his congregation at
the time. “I’m not here to judge which is good and which is bad. I am here to serve them all equally.”
(In the past decade, however, his congregation changed as new immigrants arrived from Algeria, Morocco,
Egypt and Pakistan; Eid was ousted in favor of a more conservative imam in 2005.)
The relative peace that came with invisibility disappeared after 9/11. When Muslims became objects of
fear, “people who had never recognized and seen themselves as Muslims had no choice but to see
themselves as Muslim,” says Muzaffar Chisti, director of the Migration Policy Institute at the New York
University School of Law. Young women who had never before worn the traditional Islamic head covering—
and whose mothers saw it as a symbol of the backwardness they had left at home—put on the veil.
According to a 2002 study from Hamilton College, more than a third of Muslim American women now wear the
veil every day.
The first thing Razi Mohiuddin and his wife, Tahseen, did after 9/11 was to host an open house for the
larger community at their mosque, the Muslim Community Association in Silicon Valley. More than a
thousand non-Muslims showed up. The next thing they did was take their children out of their elite
private school and install them in the school at the mosque. Before the attacks, the Mohiuddins lived
the lives of busy, successful professionals: he launched start-ups; she was a pre-K teacher. Their own
religious observance, the backbone of their family life, was private.

After the attacks “our responsibilities changed,” says Mohiuddin, who emigrated from India when he was
17. “It forced people to say, ‘Where do I stand? Either I walk away from the faith or I become more
involved in defending the faith, which [is] under assault’.” His children, he thought, needed to know
they were Muslim and feel proud. Hindsight has given Mohiuddin more reason to feel glad of this
decision; the boys are teenagers now, and Mohiuddin is thankful that they have more than a passing
knowledge of the restraint required of an observant Muslim.
To combat the discrimination many were feeling, many Muslim Americans turned, in classic American
fashion, to the courts. The Council on American Islamic Relations, an advocacy group, counted nearly
2,500 civil-rights complaints by Muslim Americans in 2006, a dramatic increase over the previous year.
These are the kinds of stories that make news—women who sue for the right to wear the hijab in their
driver’s license photo—and Muslim Americans say they show how invested they are in the American system.
This is important: history suggests that thriving civil societies tend to smooth the sharper edges of
faith. Religious convictions are no less firm or real, but they are less likely to fuel the kind of
extremism that can lead to violence. The six imams who were pulled off a US Airways flight last fall
after praying openly at a Minneapolis airport gate have sued the airline and the airport commission for
civil-rights violations. “I believe in justice in the United States, and that’s why we’ve taken this
case to court,” says Didmar Faja, one of the imams.
For younger Muslims the attention of the world means they have to grapple in a very conscious way with
what they call their hyphenated identity. The result has been an open embrace of their religion, but in
a manner suited to the community’s diversity. According to Pew, 60 percent of Muslims age 18 to 29 think
of themselves as “Muslim first,” compared with 40 percent of people older than 30, and they are much
more likely than their parents to go to mosque every week. At the same time, they tend to be blind to
ethnic and racial differences, and they dismiss Islamic customs about gender roles as so much cultural
baggage. Sakina Al-Amin, a student at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor who is active in the
Muslim Students’ Association there, says that sometimes “parents are too into culture, and then the
child tries to find ways out of it.” When a parent objects, for example, to an inter-ethnic marriage,
Al-Amin says the children may argue that Islam does not prevent such a union. Idil Jama Farah, a 21-
year-old Somali student at the University of Minnesota, is a case in point. She recently married a white
Muslim convert from Boston, in spite of her mother’s initial disapproval. “I don’t think culture is very
important. I think religion is important,” she says.
In Muslim intellectual circles, imagining ways to accommodate these young people is topic A, but the
reality is somewhat grimmer. There are so few homegrown Muslim clerics in America today—and almost no
institutions for training them—that prayer in most mosques is led by a scholar fresh off the plane from
Lebanon, say, or Saudi Arabia, someone with no connection to America and no affinity for its culture.
The foreign-born imams “are at a disconnect with our new generation,” says Maher Hathout, an Egyptian-
born cardiologist and senior adviser to the Muslim Public Affairs Council in Los Angeles. “If you get
the best scholar in Islamics, but he cannot connect with my child or my grandchild, it’s a waste. It’s
the opposite of what we want.”
More unsettling is the question of what these foreign-born imams preach. According to unofficial
estimates by government investigators, at least 50 percent of American mosques may receive some funding
from foreign governments or institutions, mostly Saudi Arabia. The danger is obvious: if Saudi Arabia is
exporting its Wahhabi Islam to this country via imams, pamphlets, Qur’ans and buildings, how long before
a warped version of this extremist ideology intersects with a vulnerable group of teenagers? So far,
connections between Saudi influence and the handful of suspected terror plots hatched here since 9/11
have been tenuous, according to the public record. However, Hathout deems such gifts risky enough that
the bylaws of his mosque mandate against them. Foreign money, he says, is “problematic to the point of
being dangerous. It creates a dependence.”

Whatever its source, fundamentalist Islamic ideology is readily available on the Internet as well as in
U.S. mosques. In one poor neighborhood in Trenton, N.J., at the Masjid As-Saffat, which for more than 20
years had served a mixed community of Muslims from Afghanistan, Egypt, Somalia and the Palestinian
territories, the presiding imam several years ago suddenly and inexplicably had an ideological change of
heart. Whereas once people worshiped together in a communal, almost relaxed way, imam Sabur Abdul Hakim
began applying rigid standards to prayer and worship. Last year he closed the mosque school, saying it
wasn’t sufficiently Islamic, congregants say. He began to preach a Salafi ideology, invoking the purity
of the earliest Muslims and disapproving of any variation. In a perfectly American response, a group of
Hakim’s opponents sued him, demanding that he and his supporters be removed from the board of directors,
that they turn over the mosque’s accounting books and records and that elections be held to instate new
trustees. The case is in mediation; Hakim and his lawyer declined to comment.
While the schism within the mosque is on the surface ideological, it is also at least partly racial and
ethnic. The majority of the congregation is foreign-born. Hakim and most of his supporters are African-
American. And while the community lived and worshiped together peacefully for almost two decades,
Hakim’s new stance elicited powerful, dormant feelings about whose Islam is authentic. Gulgai Masuod, a
62-year-old immigrant from Afghanistan, had been close to Hakim for years, but strongly disapproves of
his changes. Hakim and his cohorts, says Masuod, “have no knowledge of Islam … My father and great-
grandfathers have been Muslim for 1,400 years. You are not telling me how to practice Islam.”
African-American Muslims say such reactions are common. Growing up African-American and Muslim in
Chicago, Ismail Mitchel says he never fit in. Black Muslims are in a “no man’s land,” says Mitchel, a
21-year-old student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “We get flak from Arabs and we
get flak from other black people.” Neither group, he says, wants to embrace him. “It’s like we’re the
black sheep of the whole community, literally.”
Muslim American advocates have critiqued the press coverage of the Pew study, saying it focused too much
on the bad news and not enough on the good. The bad news, however, bears repeating: 26 percent of
Muslims age 18 to 29 believe that suicide bombing can be justified. Thirty-eight percent of that group
believe that Arabs did not carry out the 9/11 attacks. These data, combined with the rising religious
conservatism of young Muslim Americans, have led some experts to argue that differences between Europe
and America have been overblown, that affluence and education do not inoculate a society against
radicalization. “This idea that all those who are middle class are exempted from extremism has always
been false,” says Geneive Abdo, author of “Mecca and Main Street.” “The leadership of the extremist
movements have always been highly educated Muslims.”
It’s impossible to underestimate the emotional nature of anti-Israel sentiment among Arab-American
youth, argues Ismael Ahmed, executive director of the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social
Services in Detroit. “I think the poll miscaptures what’s being said,” he says. “There is such a thing
as legitimate resistance to oppression, and there is terrorism on both sides. It’s wrong, but there’s
also the right to resist.” The poll numbers, in his view, don’t point to a threat of homegrown suicide
bombers, but to a passionate defense of a resistance movement—the way, 30 years ago, an Irish-American
teenager would have supported the IRA.

The deeper problem is a growing sense of alienation among young Muslims, a sense that they don’t feel
part of the American story. According to Pew, 39 percent of Muslim Americans age 18 to 29 believe that
newly arrived Muslims should remain distinct from society at large, compared with 17 percent of Muslims
older than 55. Ferdous Sajedeen arrived here from Bangladesh in 1975 and built a successful pharmacy
business in Queens. For years, Sajedeen imagined that he would eventually return to Bangladesh, but
after visiting Dhaka several years ago, he realized how impossible that was; he didn’t understand the
jokes anymore, he didn’t feel part of the culture. “I don’t deny my roots,” he says. “I am proud to be a
Bangladeshi, but at the same time the reality is I am a Bangladeshi-American.” September 11, he says,
was “one of the saddest stories anywhere in the world.”
His son Autri, who at 21 is in his fourth year of pharmacy school and lives at home with his parents,
does not feel his father’s patriotism. “When we grew up, nobody ever looked at us like we were
Americans,” he says. On 9/11, “it sounds bad to say, but I remember thinking that I didn’t care that it
happened. A lot of my friends didn’t care. I think it’s because we’re Muslim.” For him, the bombing of
Afghanistan that followed was much more tragic and painful. Fundamentalists are “crazy,” he adds
emphatically. He would never condone terrorism.
This sense of alienation can be seen most clearly in places like Lackawanna, home of the six convicted
young men. Earlier this year the Lackawanna varsity and junior-varsity soccer teams were suspended from
the local league for rough play. The varsity team, which is predominantly Yemenite, accuses some of the
referees and fans of being racist. (Fans called them “terrorists” and “camel jockeys” during games,
players say.) At the same time, the players broke the rules of good behavior: after losing a critical
game, 3-2, they swore at and allegedly spit on the other players, and in one case allegedly shoved a
referee. In a town with high unemployment and the constant risk of losing kids to drugs and crime,
soccer was a wholesome, if occasionally rough, way to pass the time. The team played “all night, all
day,” says star varsity forward Hamud Alasri, 17. Alasri was hoping to get a soccer scholarship to the
University of Buffalo, but with the team’s suspension, that opportunity has passed.
Kathy Ahmed, 37, refused to let her son, Jamil, now 20, join the soccer team; she didn’t like the racist
environment of the public high school or the league play. Asked if she’s worried that the young men in
her community are at risk of becoming terrorists, Ahmed says no: the Lackawanna Six were vulnerable boys
seduced by a charismatic radical. “I’m not worried about [boys in Lackawanna] becoming terrorists. I
worry that they’ll lose their spirituality. There are so many things calling them. I see them as lost.”
Losing Jamil Ahmed and Autri Sajedeen would be the worst thing in the world—not just for them, but for
all of us.
With Roya Wolverson in Lackawanna, Sanhita Sen in Queens, Karen Breslau and Robina Riccitiello in
Silicon Valley, Julie Scelfo in Trenton, Arian Campo-Flores in Boston, Hilary Shenfeld in Chicago,
Roqaya Ashmawey in Ann Arbor, Aisha Eady in Minneapolis, Christopher Dickey in Paris, Mark Hosenball,
Daren Briscoe and Abby Dalton in Washington and Owen Matthews in Istanbul
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19876834/site/newsweek/page/0/

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

Like Mr Siddiq, I and my family are lucky and do not fear for ourselves...we do share his concerns though. I really think that the problems arise when Muslims segregate themselves from the mainstream by living in and staying within small Islaamic communities. This creates and fosters the feeling of isolation. If you look at troubles like the "Lackawanna 6", they isolated themselves which helped foster outsider's feelings of mistrust. Which made them feel even more isolated.

That isnt the entire problem for sure. But its a really big part of it IMHO.

Another part of the problem is education. Ignorance about Islaam within the US fosters more mistrust since media reports on the extremists. Thats "news worthy" stuff and it may be the only knowledge that some americans receive about Islaam. There has been a big effort for sure since 9-11 to educate the masses a bit more about the REAL Islaam but its not enough, not yet.

Those 2 issues need to be addressed very aggressively IMHO to make things better.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

Incredible article!~
JAzak Allah Sr. D for posting this. We know Sr. Sakina Al-Amin who has been quoted from UoM Michigan. She is my wife's good friend. We do disagree on some issues, however, I say that I agree 100% to what she stated here.

The part of the article that I agree to the most without reservations is..
"..
The relative peace that came with invisibility disappeared after 9/11. When Muslims became objects of fear, "people who had never recognized and seen themselves as Muslims had no choice but to see themselves as Muslim," says Muzaffar Chisti, director of the Migration Policy Institute at the New York University School of Law. Young women who had never before worn the traditional Islamic head covering—and whose mothers saw it as a symbol of the backwardness they had left at home—put on the veil. According to a 2002 study from Hamilton College, more than a third of Muslim American women now wear the veil every day.
.."

Since I was the head of a local Islamic center for some time, I believe, that overall, we must assimilate in society without losing our Islamic Identity. A tough task at hand, although not impossible. Bearing with the occasional hate looks or heckling, we in the US should rely on Allah SWT and live as active members of society but maintain our Islamic lifestyle. It is then we will achieve our real goal. We will speard the message of Islam without any violence and strengthen its presence in our own lives as well.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

Most people recognize the US as a wonderful nation built on great ideals. Let the world know that only a lost few dislike the US.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

My God, you don't expect anyone to read all that do you?

It's messed up for Muslim/Brown ppl in the West now, in America it started with 9/11, but that didn't affect us much and white ppl even use to joke about it whereas we felt the need to be apologetic so we said it was sick to joke about stuff like that! But with 7/7 everything changed, they look at us suspiciously now, bus drivers sometimes don't stop for us, Paki bussinesses (Taxi/Cab, grocery-store etc.) don't get as much bussiness. Before 7/7 this country was good to us, Pakis never thought about moving "back home" seriously, back then only the young and the BNP gave us racist taunts, now even the educated middle/upper class loath us and look at us suspiciously. We don't all hate the West (some of us Muslims are the West) and we don't want to blow anyone up but they're standoffish, it'd be nice to loosen up and have a laugh with them, I'd love to be able to interact with ppl as a human but I can't because I know they look at me as a Paki (one of the Mozlems) and even when they don't mention anything I can sense the awkwardness, I've decided it's just easier to socialise with those in the same boat (Pakis, Turks, Arabs etc.), meeting white ppl for a shag is where my non-professional interaction with them ends, which is a shame because when we were growing up my closest friends were white (next door's kids' who rented our spare house out), or our other neighbour who had like 10 dogs and it was so cool taking them all out for walks togther, there was also my grandma's friend who was like a granny to us after my grandparents moved back to Pak.. but now this country is a completely different place for us, there is widening gap between the communities.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

I read it.

Anyways, ya 9/11, it was Arabs who were the terrorists. But after 7/7, Pakistanis have joined Arabs.

Again, it was the British Pakistanis who did the deed.

Like I have always said, British Pakistanis have shamed Pakistanis everywhere

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

^
yep, unfortunately but you can't generalise their actions to all British Pakis anymore than to Pakis anywhere else.

i agree that a lot of Pakis in Britian are messed up and incline towards gangs or suicide-cults but their elder generation were not like that, yeah they were uneducated goatherds from Mirpur and couldn't speak a word of English so there was a communication gap but they didn't hate anyone, they tried to get along, if anything they were the victims of racial abuse, they put up with it and were extremely docile.. their younger generation are the opposite, they actively seek trouble, their parents didn't have the skills neccsary to bring them up proper in an alien enviroment so they're messed.

Urdu-speaking, plains-Punjabi (opposed to mountain-Punjabis), Pashtun kids are no where near as bad, they stick to their books and make Pakis proud even if they turn out BBconfusedD, unfortuanately some do get pulled into the mainstream Brit-Paki gang/drug/cult MP culture.

Not all MP's are bad though, just a lot of the ones in this country, some make us proud like Amir Khan (boxer).

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

british pakistanis were brain washed by pakistani immigrants and went to pakistan to get terror training from Pakistani militants.

lets not just say they were british paks and that no one else had a role to play in it.

and its not just brit paks, it is mostly a certain socio-ethnic group which sadly shares this mentality with their compatriots in places that their families hailed from.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

As a Pakistani-American, this nation has given me tremendous opportunity both in terms of education and the life experiences. Faith, is a deeply personal matter for me. As I have gotten more religious (compared to my parents) I see where Islam and America intersect and where they depart.

While it is a tough political landscape for all Muslims these days I can't think of any overt cases of discrimination. Perhaps it has been subtle but thats ok. I work hard, I believe in our joint humanity and try to do the right thing everyday. Love me or hate me is not my concern having the educational and career opportunities and freedoms is much more important. If they are curtailed then I'm out.

We all have enemies, people who don't like us etc. either we worry about them or show who we are through our deeds.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

BRAVO to you pakone and also to you Antumul!! People like you are the ones who are turning it all around and helping people to truly understand.

People like you are truly brave, true to yourselves and your beliefs, you are the ones who will lead a new generation into a new understanding.

Hats off to you.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

it'll help you guys if the US believed and implemented a nuclear free middle east. most of the schism expressed in the media does probably emanate from this. ie the US is perceived to be anti muslim to an extreme. feel free to correct me if im wrong

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

Mo3, Mr. Siddiq is talking about Muslims...

[quote]
I really think that the problems arise when Muslims segregate themselves from the mainstream by living in and staying within small Islaamic communities. This creates and fosters the feeling of isolation. If you look at troubles like the "Lackawanna 6", they isolated themselves which helped foster outsider's feelings of mistrust. Which made them feel even more isolated.

[/quote]

I totally agree Mo3...I also believe the green zone should be dismantled and everyone desegregate themselves...

[quote]
That isnt the entire problem for sure. But its a really big part of it IMHO.

Another part of the problem is education. Ignorance about Islaam within the US fosters more mistrust since media reports on the extremists. Thats "news worthy" stuff and it may be the only knowledge that some americans receive about Islaam. There has been a big effort for sure since 9-11 to educate the masses a bit more about the REAL Islaam but its not enough, not yet.

Those 2 issues need to be addressed very aggressively IMHO to make things better.
[/quote]

This is something I totally agree with...

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

^ she does have a muslim family as well.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

Jazak Allahu Khairan!
Islam is everlasting, its message is solid, its "us" the muslims that need to learn the ropes of this new road that we have been forced to walk upon now.

Lets not seclude into the ethno-centric enclaves the article mentions, however, lets not lose our religion and its message either. May Allah be our Protector!! (ameen)

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

ahh, just finished reading the whole article and the comments by others - all enriching and quite informative, thanks. :)

sis, and everyone, case_study feels that being perceived as vulnerable does not mean that we are.
and we are really nice people, the ex patriot communities are beneficial just much as they are benefiting in foreign lands.
comparing the plight of other people from other races will make it less anxiety-ridden for us to feel apologetic about our id.
it is true for other people such as Africans, Caribbean, Indians and eastern Europeans etc. who labor in other countries and not their own.
of course we have to address things blown out of proportion as in propaganda and also taken out of context to hold our identity as Muslims who are willing to make all sacrifice and settle in non native parts of the world.

good and bad is in all backgrounds. uk is no heavens for anyone.
we make it for ourselves or fail at it due to factors not directly in our control.

hopes that people can become more accurately aware of each other and the targets of their stereotypes and paranoid illusions or delusions.
cheers!

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

For your information Amir Khan is not an MP (short for Mirpuri). His family originate from village 'Mehra Matore' which is in Tehsil Kahuta and district Rawalpindi. He is from the Raja family and yes he speaks the same language as Mirpuris. Does that make him Mirpuri? Nope.

Re: In America - vulnerability of Muslims

thanks everyone for sharing your perspectives.

the saddest of all the facts is that within, there is so much division. and quite easily opportunists enjoy that factor, to their maximum criminal benefit. research always has indicated that prejudice, stereotypes and discrimination is misdirected and intentional because of the paranoia in which the aggressors live and glorify themselves in the self claim of being the mightier.

time will tell obviously who is who and what is what.